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Fresh off reviewing our recently issued speech code report, the Daily Tar Heel at the University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill (UNC) highlights the fact that UNC at present maintains three "yellow light" speech codes infringing upon students' freedom of expression. These policies have no place at an institution like UNC that not only is legally obligated to uphold the First Amendment, but is morally obligated to follow through on its statements of being an institution committed to free speech and the exchange of ideas. Writing for the Daily Tar Heel, Amanda Albright quotes our Samantha Harris, who points out that UNC's speech codes—as "yelllow light" policies are wont to be—are vague on their face and could be interpreted or misapplied to censor protected speech:
While this should be worrying to any student at UNC, the same apparently cannot be said for the UNC administration:
That's not exactly the ringing endorsement of free speech principles that one hopes to hear from a senior official at a public university. And given UNC's problems respecting First Amendment rights in the past, most recently in the case of Emeritus Professor Elliot Cramer, I would be concerned if I were a UNC student wishing to speak freely and engage in expressive activities on campus. Quite simply, the First Amendment deserves better at UNC. As the Daily Tar Heel article notes, UNC is not an exception in the state of North Carolina. Indeed, several other institutions in the state received our worst, "red light" rating when surveyed for our report. I'm looking at you, Appalachian State University, Davidson College, East Carolina University, North Carolina Central University, UNC - Greensboro, Wake Forest University, and Winston Salem State University. Happily, the article cites an example of speech code reform elsewhere to which UNC and other North Carolina schools can aspire. It comes from their neighbors to the north at the University of Virginia:
Here's hoping that UNC and its in-state compatriots follow the example set by the University of Virginia. Their students would certainly be better off for it. |










